When the Duke Returns

When the Duke Returns by Eloisa James Page B

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Authors: Eloisa James
and lace…”
    â€œThe picture of a proper English duke. No one else on board had a fifth of the clothes I did. And yet I had forsaken my waistcoat.” He opened his eyes very wide. “No waistcoat, Jemma.”
    â€œI appreciate the seriousness of your sacrifice,” she said, laughing.
    â€œIt was twilight and the air lay on the river—for we were on a river wider than I’ve seen in England—the air lay on that river like a fat whore on a six-penny bed.”
    Jemma snorted.
    He looked at her innocently. “Did I say something amiss?”
    He was potent…he was so potent in this mood. Wicked and sly and funny. “No,” she said. “Please continue.”
    â€œEvery time I reached out my hand to move one of the pieces, drops of sweat ran down my arm.”
    â€œAnd yet Cosway was not discomforted in the least?”
    â€œHave you met him?”
    Jemma shook her head.
    â€œI think it would be fair to say that he’s my opposite. No powder. His skin is brown from the sun, of courseand he’s muscled to a degree that is vastly ungentlemanly. But I think it’s the great tumble of inky black hair, unpowdered and not even tied back, that truly marks him. One can easily imagine him fighting off four or five savages at once.”
    â€œYou could do that,” Jemma said loyally.
    â€œI’m not such a fool as to ever put myself in that situation,” Villiers said. “As I recall, he wore short trousers that barely reached his knee along with a tunic-like affair, but at some point he removed that and had the boys dunk it in the river. They returned it to him wet. He appeared to be quite comfortable.”
    â€œUnfair!” Jemma said.
    â€œDid I mention that he was barefoot?”
    â€œNo. And you?”
    â€œBoots. Sturdy English boots made for an exploring Englishman, out to gather useful knowledge of the world’s fauna and flora.”
    â€œYou came home,” Jemma guessed.
    â€œI forsook all the chess games I might have won in the palaces of the great pashas…I succumbed to the heat.”
    â€œOr perhaps,” Jemma said wickedly, “to your insistence on dressing like a duke.”
    â€œIt has occurred to me since. Vanity, thy name is Villiers. Do read his letter.”
    Jemma had forgotten about it. There was no formal salutation.
    Villiers,
    I’m having a devil of a time since my return. Would you do me the honor of paying me a visit? There seems to be some disapproval of my ideas. You are, to my mind, the person best suited in theworld to advise me on matters of precedence and respectability.
    Jemma chuckled.
    â€œI gather you’ve reached the part when he talks about my ability to arbitrate standards of respectability,” Villiers said.
    â€œI was just thinking of you, all booted and laced, on board that ship.”
    â€œThe letter continues.”
    My mother assures me that I stand to blacken the title of Cosway throughout England for the next hundred years. If you could pay me a visit at Revels House, I would be most grateful.
    Yours & etc.
Cosway
    Jemma looked up. “What on earth can he be planning? Isidore said that he’d alluded to a wedding celebration that included some sort of animal sacrifice—but he can’t be thinking of enacting a primitive rite here. He would be arrested!”
    â€œNot for animal sacrifice,” Villiers said. “As someone who loves sirloin, I can assure you that many cattle have been sacrificed to keep me happy.”
    â€œYou know what I mean,” Jemma said. “And Isidore mentioned orgies. ”
    â€œWell, that settles it. I knew you were the person to speak to. I shall have to pay him a visit, if only so that I can be part of the orgy planning.”
    â€œHave you participated in many?”
    â€œOrgies or weddings?” he asked innocently.
    â€œI doubt you have been in any weddings,” she pointedout. “Your

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